Maybe I'll end up posting these regularly on Sunday after all, since I've been doing some work on Saturdays the past couple of weeks. That's really kind of a note to myself, I suppose.

So we had a busy week at Casselbloggy HQ, but it was a fun one. Always better when there's plenty of stuff going on and these fingers get to typin'. Kevin Causey of Bloguin's The Student Section asked me to participate in two roundtables involving fictional football players and coaches from movies and TV, which was a lot of fun. But I was happy to get some more baseball writing in this week, as that's supposed to be what I do the most. The season has finally begun for me!

All right, here's how the past week went, writing-wise, with some good reads thrown in. Thanks for checking in!

-- Directors and writers — and of course, actors — largely get the credit in comedies, but how about the editors that splice all that footage together, making sure the timing is spot-on and cutting to the right look on camera? In the New York Times magazine, Jonah Weiner shines the spotlight on Brett White, who makes filmmakers like Paul Feig, Judd Apatow and Adam McKay look good.

-- What makes Kate McKinnon's Hillary Clinton impersonation on SNL so good? What sets it apart from those who have imitated Clinton in the past, such as Amy Poehler, Vanessa Bayer and Jan Hooks? Ian Crouch analyzes the darker turn that McKinnon's version of the character takes in The New Yorker.

-- Reds manager Bryan Price went nuts on the media last week, particularly Cincinnati Enquirer beat writer C. Trent Rosecrans, for reporting and giving readers the information they want. Which is actually, you know, his job. Rosecrans gives his side of the story, providing insight into the incident and the job of baseball beat reporter.

-- Tabitha Soren followed the Oakland Athletics' draft class of 2002 (covered in Moneyball, written by her husband, Michael Lewis), chronicling their exploits in a series of photographs. Soren held an exhibit for her photos last week in Los Angeles, and Tyler Bleszinski (founder of Athletics Nation and co-founder of SB Nation/Vox Media) had a chance to interview her.